Fannie Mae launches AI partnership after Trump’s shake-up talk

Fannie Mae has announced a partnership with artificial intelligence firm Palantir to enhance its fraud prevention efforts in the mortgage sector with a new AI-powered tool called the Fraud Defence Dome. This initiative comes as Fannie Mae prepares for a potential public offering, amidst ongoing discussions by President Trump about privatizing Fannie Mae and Freddie mac, which play notable roles in the U.S. mortgage market.

Fannie Mae Chairman William pulte emphasized the importance of the partnership in increasing safety within the housing system, while Trump continues to advocate for making the two entities private, insisting that they are performing well financially. Both organizations are pivotal in backing trillions of dollars in home loans and are taking steps to modernize operations, with Fannie Mae’s CEO Priscilla Almodovar highlighting the aim to utilize AI to identify undetectable fraud patterns, thereby benefiting lenders, homebuyers, and taxpayers. The collaboration is expected to revolutionize efforts against mortgage fraud, as noted by Palantir’s CEO Alex Karp.


Fannie Mae launches AI partnership amid Trump’s talk of selling off mortgage giant

On the heels of news that it could soon go “public,” Fannie Mae has launched a partnership with artificial intelligence firm Palantir.

The mortgage behemoth has announced the Fraud Defense Dome, an AI-powered tool created along with Palantir. According to a press release, the program will expand Fannie Mae’s fraud prevention capabilities using AI-enabled financial crimes data and investigations technology.

The idea is to help prevent mortgage fraud.

“No one is above the law,” Fannie Mae Chairman William Pulte said in a release. “In partnership with Palantir, Fannie Mae’s Fraud Defense Dome will increase safety and soundness by rooting out bad actors in our housing system. This cutting-edge AI technology will help us find anyone who tries to defraud our system.”

At the same time, President Donald Trump stood firm on his calls to sell Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, saying the U.S. government would keep its “implicit guarantees” to back the companies if needed. The companies are federally backed and publicly traded, but Trump’s call to make them “public” implies an end to the government conservatorship.

“I will stay strong in my position on overseeing them as President,” he wrote. “These Agencies are now doing very well, and will help us to, MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!”

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac back trillions of dollars in home loans. They do not issue loans themselves but instead buy mortgages from banks and then package them into securities that are sold to big investors such as pension funds, insurers, and hedge funds.

While they already operate mortgage theft prevention programs, the partnership with Palantir aims to improve speed and precision to save taxpayer dollars through improved fraud prevention.

“By integrating this leading AI technology, we will look across millions of datasets to detect patterns that were previously undetectable,” Fannie Mae President and CEO Priscilla Almodovar said. “This new partnership will combat mortgage fraud, saving money for lenders, homebuyers, and taxpayers.”

Fannie Mae’s asset portfolio tops $4.3 trillion, making it the largest owner of outstanding residential mortgage debt in the country. It holds roughly 1 in 4 single-family home mortgages.

“This partnership with Fannie Mae will set off a revolution in how we combat mortgage fraud in this country,” Palantir Technologies CEO Alex Karp said. “People who seek to game our housing system will
now be going up against the strongest, very best technology system ever devised.”

Why Trump wants to sell mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac

The AI news comes as Trump pushes to take Fannie and Freddie private, as the pair could be worth $300 billion or more.

“Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are doing very well, throwing off a lot of CASH, and the time would seem to be right,” Trump wrote last week on Truth Social. “Stay tuned!”

The prospect of a financial windfall has revived Trump’s interest, and most conservatives believe that government control of Fannie and Freddie, which took place amid the 2008 financial crisis, should never have lasted 17 years.

Pulte, the 37-year-old grandson of a real estate mega-developer, has set his sights on changing and modernizing the agencies. He dubbed the pair “obese” and said he wants to put them “on the treadmill.”



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